• Can Fam Physician · Nov 2016

    Review

    Approaching a global definition of family medicine: The Besrour Papers: a series on the state of family medicine in the world.

    • Christine Gibson, Neil Arya, David Ponka, Katherine Rouleau, and Robert Woollard.
    • Clinical Assistant Professor in the Department of Family Medicine at the Cumming School of Medicine at the University of Calgary in Alberta and Executive Director of the Global Familymed Foundation.
    • Can Fam Physician. 2016 Nov 1; 62 (11): 891896891-896.

    ObjectiveTo find a common global definition of family medicine.Composition Of The CommitteeSince 2012, the College of Family Physicians of Canada has hosted the Besrour Conferences to reflect on its role in advancing the discipline of family medicine globally. The Besrour Papers Working Group, which was struck at the 2013 conference, was tasked with developing a series of papers to highlight the key issues, lessons learned, and outcomes emerging from the various activities of the Besrour collaboration. The working group comprised members of various academic departments of family medicine in Canada and abroad who attended the conferences.MethodsSearching both definition of family medicine and history of family medicine yields a variety of defining features. Visiting family medicine training programs worldwide highlights this discrepancy.ReportIt is not an easy task to define family medicine-one of its key attributes is its adaptability to a local context, but this makes aggregation of data challenging. There is a lack of clarity regarding whether family medicine is the same discipline globally and what the core features are that define it. Unifying components of the definition have always included comprehensive care at all life stages and the management of the common illnesses of a particular community. The emerging global emphasis on competency and social accountability demonstrates commitment to the principle that family doctors provide health care for all in the context of the community. Although the competencies are not universal, the fact that family physicians fill in primary care "gaps" and tailor learning strategies to community priorities is a unifying distinction. We argue for a focus on the core competencies that bind us as a discipline.ConclusionFamily medicine can be practised in various forms. The unifying elements are the socially accountable responsiveness to local need, the adaptation of existing health infrastructure, and the ongoing development of the skills required to succeed in that role-always grounded in relationships of care. In this way, family medicine will continue to evolve to suit the health needs of communities and health systems.Copyright© the College of Family Physicians of Canada.

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